While Babs has appeared in a majority of the episodes of Tiny Toon Adventures, I have decided to list only those in which she's a main character. Here they are in order of appearance. Original airdates are in parentheses. The number on the front of each title is the production number.
#148: The Looney Beginning (9/14/90)
After crumpling up a drawing of Montana Max and throwing him away, a cartoonist is forced to create a new cartoon series by the next morning. With Bugs Bunny's help, he creates Babs and Buster Bunny, who go off to find other toons to fill up Acme Acres.
#140: A Quack in the Quarks (9/17/90)
Babs portrays Princess Leia in a "Star Wars" parody - along with Hamton as R2D2, Buster as Han Solo, and Chewcudda - after Plucky gets himself into trouble volunteering to show two transfer students around Acme Loo. These "students" turn out actually to be two aliens sent to bring back an Earth specimen, causing Babs, Buster, and Hamton to steal the Duck Dodgers ship and rescue Plucky from Planet X.
#113: The Wheel O' Comedy (9/18/90)
Babs and Buster host an episode of shorts: "Devil Doggie", "Optical Intrusion", and "Win, Lose, or Kerplowie". In "Win, Lose, or Kerplowie", Buster steps in for Babs when Montana Max decides to rig the game show.
#119: The Buster Bunny Bunch (9/20/90)
In "Buffed Bunny", Buster tries to impress Babs by going to a gym and getting beat up by Arnold. In "Born to Be Riled", Babs impersonates Shirley, Fifi, Dizzy, and Plucky, much to their disliking. Also includes "Squish".
#108: Her Wacky Highness (9/21/90)
Babs feels unappreciated when she gets sent home from school for impersonating Elmer Fudd impersonating Elvis. So, she runs off to Wackyland, where she meets up with Gogo the Dodo. Buster, Hamton, and Plucky then go to find her there.
#138: Journey to the Center of Acme Acres (9/24/90)
Babs and Buster go down under - and I don't mean Australia - to rescue Hamton and Plucky after they fall into a crevice created by earthquakes.
#131: It's Buster Bunny Time (9/26/90)
In "Lifestyles of the Rich and Rotten", Babs and Buster do everything they can to get an interview with Montana Max. Also includes "Bag That Bunny", "The Anvil Chorus", and a brief message from the Adult Coalition Against Funny Cartoons.
#117: Hare Raising Night (10/1/90)
Buster recruits Babs, Plucky, and Hamton on a secret mission to stop Dr. Gene Splicer - an experimenter of animal mutation - but tells them they're going to the Emmy Awards. Babs then wins the heart of a monster who's part dog, part chicken, part dragon, and part bull.
#128: The Acme Acres Zone (10/3/90)
In "A Walk on the Flip Side", Montana Max wakes up to find he has been turned into a bunny, which then pleases Babs, Buster, and, of course, Elmyra. And in "Senserely Yours, Babs", Babs' sense of humor gets separated from the rest of her body as a result of misguided Calamity Coyote's experimentation. Calamity and Hamton then try to get her sense of humor back before she becomes permanently humorless. Also includes "A Bacon Strip".
#126: Life in the 90's (10/4/90)
In "Whining Out", Hamton takes Babs, Buster, and Plucky to a restaurant whose ambiance is not less than snobbish. In "Butt Out", Babs must deal with rude smokers Roderick and Rubella Rat. Also features "Paper Trained".
#124: Prom-ise Her Anything (10/8/90)
Buster and Babs head to the prom, where they find a stood-up Elmyra and help her out. Then Buster embarrasses Babs with a dance he learned from an old Bugs Bunny
cartoon.
#102: Cinemaniacs! (10/10/90)
Buster and Babs go theater "hopping", much to Montana Max's dismay. Includes the shorts "Superbabs" - where Babs goes out to stop Wex Wuthor (a.k.a. Montana Max), "Duck Trek", and "Pasadena Jones".
#104: You Asked For It (10/11/90)
In "Debutante Devil", Babs sets Dizzy straight after Taz sends him out to "eat bunny". Also includes "Slight of Hare" and "Duck Out of Luck".
#130: Wake Up Call of the Wild (10/17/90)
Babs and Buster - along with the other toonsters - ponder about their own species in an episode that contains the shorts "Migrant Mallard", "It's a Jungle Out There", and "Kitty Cat-Astrophe".
#107: Buster and the Wolverine (10/19/90)
In a parody of "Peter and the Wolf", Buster must save the rest of the toonsters - including Babs being represented with a harp - after a vicious wolverine eats them all up.
#123: You Asked For It, Part II (10/22/90)
Babs and Buster pull out letters from a previously-eaten-by-Dizzy viewer-request mail hopper, and the following are requested: "The Weird Couple", "The Return of the Toxic Revenger", and "Little Cake of Horrors".
#142: Europe in 30 Minutes (10/26/90)
During a trip through Buckingham Palace, a plot to kidnap Prince Charles and Princess Diana is in the works, but Buster and Babs - disguised as the "Chuck and Di" (as Plucky refers to them) - get kidnapped instead.
#136: The Wacko World of Sports (10/30/90)
Babs and Buster set out as the Vanderbunnies to teach Roderick and Rubella a lesson in "Miniature Goof". Also includes "Tennis the Menace" and "Bleacher Bummer".
#115: Rainy Daze (11/1/90)
Alone at home, Babs keeps herself occupied with a series of dream sequences in "Bunny Daze". In "Fur-Gone Conclusion", Babs and Buster end up in the Arctic, where they must protect a baby seal from a fur-obsessed woman who's out to make a new fur coat. Also includes "Rent A Friend".
#116: Fields of Honey (11/2/90)
In a "Field of Dreams" parody, Babs - depressed over not having a mentor - is sent down to the film vault to settle a Bugs and Daffy dispute between Buster and Plucky. While there, she hears a voice say to her "if you watch them, you will find her", which leads her to Honey, a long-lost cartoon who - like her - was a female impresario.
#137: Sawdust and Toonsil (11/5/90)
In an attempt to save the Sphinx from Silas Wonder's circus train of sideshow creatures, Gogo is captured and it's up to Babs, Buster, and Plucky to save him.
#135: Spring in Acme Acres (11/6/90)
In "Love Among Toons", Cupid quits and it's up to Concord Condor to take over. Unfortunately he pairs Babs with Montana Max, among other odd couples. Also includes "Elmyra's Spring Cleaning" and "That's Incredibly Stupid".
#149: Wide World of Elmyra (11/8/90)
Babs and Buster visit the jungle to show us the most dangerous of creatures. Includes the shorts "Turtle Hurdle", "Drooley Davey", and "Go Fetch".
#111: Career Opportunities (11/13/90)
Babs and Buster work at Weenie Burger and are forced to serve Monty in "Buster's Guide to Part Time Jobs". Also includes "Working Pig" and "Falling to Pizzas".
#129: Inside Plucky Duck (11/15/90)
Babs and Buster take a trip into Plucky's brain. Includes "Bat's All Folks" and "Wild Takes Class".
#120: The Acme Bowl (11/16/90)
Babs is head cheerleader for Acme Loo in the big football game against Perfecto Prep, but eventually she and the other cheerleaders - Fifi and Shirley - decide to join the team as players.
#114: Dating, Acme Acres Style (11/19/90)
Babs and Buster host three shorts on dating. In "Buster's Guide to Dating", Buster and Babs give various rules as the short ensues. And in "Dream Date Game", Babs and Buster help Elmyra look for her perfect date. Also includes "Love Stinks".
#154: Whale's Tales (11/26/90)
Buster and Babs set out to rescue a baby whale's mother from Gotcha Grabmore, who likes to turn animals into tacky merchandise.
#143: Fairy Tales of the 90's (12/12/90)
Babs appears as a fairy in this episode that includes "Bunnochio" and "Bear Necessities".
#144: Who Bopped Bugs Bunny? (12/14/90)
Babs, Buster, Hamton, and Plucky set out to find out who kidnapped Bugs Bunny from the Schmoscar Awards. Babs and Buster do a good "Columbo" parody in this episode.
#163: Tiny Toons Music Television (2/1/91)
Babs and Buster, along with Julie Bruin, host TTMTV, which includes the following songs: "Instanbul (Not Constantinople)" by They Might Be Giants, "Particle Man" by They Might Be Giants, "Respect" by Aretha Franklin, "Money (That's What I Want)" by Barrett Strong, and a parody of "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" from "Fantasia" called "Top Secret Apprentice". Babs is featured in "Respect", where she skates and dances through a library, a courtroom, a pet cemetery, and other places, toting her walkman.
#161: The Acme Home Shopping Show (2/6/91)
Includes "Oh for Art's Sake", "Teddy Bears Picnic", and "I Was a Teenage Bunnysitter", where Babs is stuck babysitting for cute but irritable baby bunny Duncan.
#157: Weirdest Story Ever Told (2/8/91)
In "To Babs Or Not To Babs", Babs tries to coax Shakespeare into giving her a part in "The Comedy of King Lear". Also includes "Robin Hare" and "Elmyras Around the World".
#139: Pollution Solution (2/14/91)
Babs and Buster are up against Ronald Gump and his promotion of the greenhouse effect in "Jungle Bungle". Also includes "No Deposit No Return of the Trash Bag Dispenser" and "Waste Deep in Wackyland".
#151: Brave Tales of Real Rabbits (2/18/91)
Buster and Babs - as Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, respectively - set out to chase down the evil Montiarty and find Elmyra's missing Jewel in "And All That Rot". Then, in "Day for Knight", Sir Buster Bunny must rescue damsel in distress...er, recently-dismissed court jester...Babs.
#164: New Character Day (2/20/91)
Babs and Buster reject would-be toonsters in this episode that includes "The Roches" and "The Return of Pluck Twacy".
#147: No Toon is an Island (2/25/91)
Babs, Buster, Hamton, and Plucky are bored at the beach until they come upon a treasure map - or actually Plucky gets bonked on the head by it encased in a bottle - and decide to set sail to claim their treasure on Booty Island. Unfortunately, a green-eyed monster also awaits them there.
#165: K-ACME TV (2/26/91)
Babs and Buster take over a TV studio in this episode full of 3-minute shorts including "Gyp-Parody", "The Blunder Years", "Honey I Shrunk the Clothes", "Toon Court", and more.
#150: High Toon (3/29/91)
Babs and Buster get lost on the way to a theme park and find themselves in an Old West town instead.
#168: Pledge Week (9/16/91)
In "It's All Relatives", Babs tries hard to impress her mom and grandma when they request "that really funny thing", but can't come up with the right impression. Also includes "Lifeguard Lunacy" and "The Kite".
#167: Going Places (9/17/91)
Babs and the rest of the gang take a field trip to a fire station, but Pete Puma manages to set the Looniversity on fire, in "When You're Hot...". Then, in "That's Art Folks!", Babs goes on a trip through art after being conked on the head during a field trip to an art museum. Also includes "Slaughterhouse Jive".
#166: Playtime Toons (9/20/91)
In "Happy Birthday Hamton", Babs, Buster, and Plucky go shopping for gifts for themselves and then dump their old toys on Hamton. Also includes "Fit to Be Toyed" and "Strung Along Kitty".
#170: Toon Physics (11/4/91)
Babs and Plucky vie for the most yearbook photos in "The Yearbook Star". Also includes "Once Upon a Star" and "A Cub for Grub".
#179: Acme Cable TV (11/11/91)
This time it's a collection of cable shorts, which include "Toonywood Squares", "Cat Who Thought He Was A Hammerhead Shark", and an infomercial hosted by Babs.
#173: Buster and Babs Go Hawaiian (11/18/91)
Babs and Buster put a halt on Hamton's script and go to Spielberg (who does his own voice here) for a better one. He gives them one written by three girls from Virginia (they had sent it to their local TV station and somehow it ended up finding its way to Spielberg's desk), which sends the bunnies on a trip to Hawaii...with Bugs' credit card in hand.
#174: Henny Youngman Day (11/22/91)
In "Stand-Up and Deliver", Babs tries her hand at stand-up comedy. Also includes "The Potty Years" and "Lame Joke".
#172: Love Disconnection (11/25/91)
Babs, Shirley, and Fifi slip into a Perfecto Prep senior party in "The Amazing Three". Also includes "My Dinner with Elmyra".
#177: Take Elmyra Please (2/17/92)
Buster and Babs introduce us to a story about Elmyra and her family.
#?; #99-102: How I Spent My Vacation (3/11/92 on video; 2/8/93, 2/10/93-2/12/93
on TV)
Babs and Buster's part of the story revolves around a squirt-gun fight that gets out of hand, causing the flooding of Acme Acres. As a result, Babs and Buster get washed downriver to Possum Swamp, where more adventures involve a Possum family.
#178: Thirteensomething (9/14/92)
In response to a challenge from Buster, Babs leaves Acme Acres and heads to New York, to take the name of Babs Bunawalskioversmith, and star in the teen drama "thirteensomething". In the meantime, Buster auditions bunnies for a new partner while watching Babs' career blossom.
#181: New Class Day (9/15/92)
Babs and Buster star as 1930's silent black-and-white cartoon characters in "Sound Off". And in "A Night in Kokomo", the bunnies - along with Plucky and Gogo - take the parts of the Marx Brothers. Also includes "Just-Us League of Super-Toons".
#190: Fox Trot (9/16/92)
Babs and Buster are being chased by foxes, as the episode continues with three shorts: "My Brilliant Revenge", "Can't Buy Me Love", and "Phone Call from 405", which revolves around Buster and Babs getting a script rewrite request by cell phone from someone named Steven.
#193: Toons Take Over (9/21/92)
A lame script pushes Buster, Babs, and Plucky to take over Warner Brothers Studios and make their own - a Shakespearean, romantic, violent action-adventure.
#194: Two-Tone Town (9/28/92)
Buster and Babs help old black-and-white toons Foxy and Roxy get a shot at a new cartoon show.
#192: Buster's Directorial Debut (11/2/92)
In "Fit To Be Stewed", Buster and Babs encounter a carrot house in the woods and decide to enter, much to the dismay of its owner, Sandy Witch. She then turns Babs into a non-toon rabbit, so Buster is forced to keep from meeting that same fate. Also includes "Ducklahoma".
#195: Washingtoon (11/4/92)
After the spokesperson for the Adult Coalition Against Funny Cartoons destroys Acme Acres with an anti-tooniness device, Buster and Babs head to Washington to get help, and discover that Vice-President Dan Quayle is a big fan of theirs.
#180: Toon TV (11/9/92)
Babs and Buster host TTMTV once again - this time without Julie Bruin - and list the top ten (actually seven) songs. In "It's in His Kiss" by Betty Everett, Babs fantasizes about Buster, while Buster does the exact opposite in "Do You Love Me?" by the Contours. Babs and Buster also appear in "The Name Game". Also includes: "Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy/Russian Dance (Video Game Blues)", "Nothing Compares to Yul" (a parody of Sinead O'Connor's song), "Toon Rap", and "Yakkity Yak" by the Coasters.
#191: Music Day (11/11/92)
Babs sets some stuck-up ballet-dancing swans straight after they're mean to Shirley in "Loon Lake". Also includes "Ruffled Ruffee" and "The Horn Blows at Lunchtime".
#196: The Horror of Slumber Party Mountain (11/12/92)
Babs, Buster, Shirley, Fifi, Plucky, and Hamton spend a night in the woods, only to find out something scary that way comes.
#188: Weekday Afternoon Live (11/16/92)
This parody of "Saturday Night Live" includes Babs as the Rich-ster and Babs, Buster, and Elmyra as Cornheads, among other skits.
#175: Best of Buster Day (11/23/92)
In "Maid to Re-Order", Montana Max fires his butler, who is then forced to stay with Buster in his burrow. Buster and Babs then go to Max's place and set him straight. Also includes "Compromising Principals" and "Class Without Class".
#098: It's A Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special (12/6/92)
This special, focusing on Buster in a "It's A Wonderful Life" parody, includes Babs doing a duet with Cher.
#182: Toons From the Crypt (5/1/93)
That date is when this episode was supposed to air. Unfortunately, it was rejected by the Fox network censors, and has yet to appear anywhere else that has shown Tiny Toons (Nickelodeon and The WB). Buster takes the role of the Crypt-Keeper in it to introduce a series of horror sketches. Conveniently, the real Crypt-Keeper, in HBO's "Tales From the Crypt", is voiced by the same person who did the voice of Buster in these later episodes, John Kassir.
#---: Tiny Toon Spring Break Special (3/27/94)
Couldn't find any information on this one. It has aired only once.
#---: Tiny Toons' Night Ghoulery (5/28/95)
Babs takes on the role of Rod Serling as host of a series of thriller shorts represented by paintings (a parody of Rod Serling's Night Gallery), including one with Babs herself in an Irish pub terrorized by a growling creature heard outside.
Credit where credit is due: all of the above information was found online in the Tiny
Toon Adventures episode guide (http://www.mindspring.com/~plucky/ttguide.html), The Big Cartoon Database (http://www.bcdb.com), and Toonzone Shows (http://www.toonzone.net/shows/episodes/). Additional information was provided by my boyfriend, Ron "Keeper" O'Dell.